Technology / Essay
Against the Instant Interface
When every button answers at once, we lose the productive pause where judgment enters the system.
In January, I spent twelve evenings in a windowless room above Mercer Hall rewriting the comment pane of a small research editor. The old pane rewarded speed: a remark appeared, a counter flashed, and everyone answered before the sentence had cooled. By the fifth night I added a deliberate interval, then watched the arguments become shorter and more exact [1].
1. Latency as editorial policy
The usual defense of instant software is moral in tone: if a machine can remove waiting, it ought to remove waiting. That principle is tidy and often wrong. A delay can be a boundary, much like a margin on a printed page; it tells the reader that the field has changed and that a reply is now an act, not a reflex.
The improvement was not sentimental. We deleted fewer drafts, cited more sources, and stopped using exclamation marks as evidence. The interface had not become slower in any meaningful operational sense; it had become honest about the cost of thought.